Hundreds of people blocked the entrance to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s San Francisco office Tuesday to protest a new national immigration policy that has children being separated from their parents at the U.S.-Mexico border.
The zero-tolerance policy adopted by U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions calls for U.S. attorneys to prosecute anyone caught trying to enter the U.S.-Mexico border illegally, including parents with children.
The policy has seen more than 2,000 children separated from their parents and placed in federal custody since early May. Recently, media outlets began broadcasting images of crying children, mostly from Central America, being detained in metal cages in warehouses.
At the ICE offices at 630 Sansome St., protesters held up signs accusing ICE of racism.
The protest caused San Francisco Municipal Railway lines 10-Townsend and 12-Folsom/Pacific to be rerouted. As of 3:15 p.m., Muni officials said the bus routes were returning back to normal.
Earlier Tuesday morning, Mayor Mark Farrell and Mayor-Elect London Breed issued statements, calling on Sessions to immediately stop the practice of separating families.
Farrell said:
Farrell added:
In a statement, Breed said:
Breed added:
City Attorney Dennis Herrera also said on social media Tuesday:
Last week, during a speech in Fort Wayne, Indiana, Sessions said the number of unaccompanied children arriving at the border has increased sharply in the last few years.
According to Sessions, the detained children are provided food, education in their native language, health and dental care, as well as transportation back to their destination city.
Sessions said:
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